COLLECTIONS OF IMAGES on the Book of Revelation by Single Artists:
Beatus de Liébana, Codex Urgellensis: a sample page from a 10th-century copy of Beatus of Liébana's Illustrated Commentary on the Apocalypse; this manuscript (with 91 illustrations) is in the Urgell Diocesan Museum in La Seu d'Urgell (Spain).
Cloisters Apocalypse - illuminations from a 14th-century manuscript; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (restricted access)
Apocalypse of St. John - sixteen woodcuts by German artist AlbrechtDürer (1471-1528) from the Wetmore Print Collection, Connecticut College
Doré Bible Illustrations - six woodcuts by Gustave Doré (1832-1883) depicting various scenes from Rev 1, 6, 12, 18, 20, and 21
Revelation Paintings: new site by Robert Roberg, includes many of his 100+ paintings illustrating various scenes from Revelation
Revelation Illustrated - 35 modern artworks by Pat Marvenko Smith, from the artist's own website; her Digital Downloads pages have five more (40 images total related to Revelation)
Apocamon: The Final Judgment - an on-line digital comic book version of the Book of Revelation; by Patrick Farley (caution: contains some offensive language and sexual innuendo, but also uses many texts and images of Rev verbatim)
Basil Wolverton's Apocalypse - a collection of 16 "horrifying scenes of the end of the world as we know it", by cartoonist Basil Wolverton, now colorized by Monte Wolverton; each image also quotes related scripture passages
INDIVIDUAL IMAGES AND MATERIALS pertaining to each Chapter of Revelation:
Saint John on Patmos (Rev 1:9) - folio 17r from Les Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry (1413-1416); also on Wikipedia
Saint John on Patmos (Rev 1:9) - painting done 1485 by Hieronymus Bosch (c.1450-1516) now in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin; click here
for another digital copy
John on Patmos
(Rev 1:9) - painting of 1518 by German Renaissance artist Hans Burgkmair (1473-1531); now in the Alte Pinakothek, Munich; click here
for another digital copy
Saint John on Patmos (Rev 1:9) - painting by Nicolas Poussin (ca. 1644); now in the Pinacoteca, Vatican City
The Throne in Heaven (Rev 4:2-11) - a digitally created figurative interpretation, by David Miles
The Four Living Creatures (Rev 4:6-11) - my own collection of various images of the creatures, later connected to the four evangelists
Rev 5 -
The Mighty Angel
("Who is worthy to open the scroll?" - Rev 5:2) - extra painting by Pat Marvenko Smith of "Revelation Illustrated"
Vision of St. John, showing God and the Lamb surrounded by the four living creatures and 24 elders (Rev 5:6-14) - central panel of the Polyptych of the Apocalypse, by Jacobello Alberegno (Venice; d. 1397), in the Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice
Apocalyptic Theories in Old English: Gallery - a very well-designed new collection by Carolin Esser, with images related to each chapter of the Book of Revelation; many images are by William Blake or Albrecht Dürer
Digital Art by Ted Larson - focusing on the Books of Exodus, Ezekiel, Daniel, Zechariah, and Revelation
Millennium Art - "dynamic cause-related exhibitions that address some of the most pressing fundamental issues of our time"